Logosophy Newsletter – August 2025

Newsletter

August 2025

Celebrating 95 Years of Logosophy

This year, we mark a momentous occasion: the 95th anniversary of the creation of Logosophy. In 1930, in Córdoba, Argentina, Carlos Bernardo González Pecotche brought forth a new form of knowledge and a transformative method for self-improvement. For nearly a century, Logosophy has illuminated a path for thousands of individuals to embark on the process of conscious evolution, offering the tools to understand and perfect their spiritual and psychological nature. This anniversary is not just a measure of time, but a celebration of the enduring legacy of a teaching that continues to guide humanity toward a higher and more conscious destiny.

Over the past 95 years, the fruits of this profound teaching have multiplied across the globe. We have seen thousands of lives transformed as individuals dedicate themselves to the study and practice of Logosophy, building happier, more balanced lives and contributing to a better world. From the adults who have found in these teachings the key to overcoming their limitations, to the thousands of children who have been educated in the logosophical values within the Logosophical Education System, the impact is immeasurable. Each person who has come into contact with Logosophy has become a beacon of a new humanity, contributing to a future of greater understanding, respect, and love.

As we celebrate this significant milestone, we look to the future with renewed inspiration. The principles of Logosophy are more relevant than ever in a world in need of greater lucidity and humanism. Let us continue to draw from this fountain of knowledge, to cultivate our inner world, and to extend the benefits of these teachings to all of humanity.

Travelling Together, Staying Connected:

How to Navigate Family Arguments

Family vacations are a great way to create lasting memories, but the close quarters and new environments can also lead to disagreements. Instead of letting arguments derail your trip, what if you could change the dynamic and maintain a peaceful, joyful atmosphere?

This isn’t about avoiding conflict entirely, but about packing a “mental suitcase” of tools to help you respond to arguments differently. By consciously preparing our minds, we can choose a better path for ourselves and our families.

Your Mental Packing List

Here are some key items to bring with you on your next trip:

  • Practice Self-Restraint: When you feel the impulse to speak or justify yourself in a heated moment, pause. Instead of reacting immediately, contain that impulse. This simple act of self-restraint prevents a small disagreement from becoming a major conflict.
  • Embrace Circumspection: This means looking inward. When a family member points out a problem, don’t see it as an attack. Instead, use it as a prompt for internal reflection. What can you learn from this? How can you create a solution? This shifts your mind from a defensive stance to a creative one.
  • Time Your Words: A key to effective communication is knowing when to speak. If someone is upset, they may not be able to hear what you have to say. Wait until the other person is calm and receptive before you try to have a serious conversation.
  • Listen with Respect: Try to listen not just to the words, but to the person behind them. Acknowledging that every human being has something valuable to share can change the way you hear what they’re saying. This respect for others is also a form of self-respect.
  • Remember the Pillars of Love: In moments of tension, recall the three pillars of love: patience, affection, and constancy. These virtues can soften your heart and guide your responses. Affection, especially, can disarm any argument.
  • Prioritize Peace Over Winning: Arguing to “win” is a futile effort that only hurts everyone involved. It damages your connection to the people you love the most. Recognize that preserving your inner peace and the harmony of the family is far more valuable than being right.

By consciously packing these tools, you can maintain your own state of serenity and kindness, ensuring that your travels are filled with connection and joy, not conflict.

A Logosophical Teaching on Conduct

This approach to navigating family arguments aligns directly with the principles outlined in the following Logosophical teaching:

The elements that shape the conduct of the logosopher

The changes imposed by self-improvement on all beings who carry out the process of conscious evolution are clearly noted in their conduct. Logosophy offers all the elements that shape this behavior and simultaneously teaches how to forge it with the cognitions that are acquired through the efforts of self-elevation.

The status of disciple implicitly necessarily imposes the possession of aptitudes considered out of the ordinary in the current world. Circumspection, for example, must be an invariable norm in him.

The natural and constant exercise of patience and tolerance has a decisive and definitive influence on significant changes in conduct. Consequently, when these are erected as consciously practiced virtues, they enrich the investigation and knowledge of oneself.”

Excerpt from the book Logosophical Exegesis by González Pecotche, p. 99.

This teaching highlights that self-improvement imposes changes on our conduct, which become evident through our actions. By consciously practicing virtues like self-restraint and circumspection, we are engaging in the conscious evolution that Logosophy promotes.

The excerpt specifically mentions that circumspection must be “an invariable norm.” In our context, this means looking inward instead of outward during a disagreement. The teaching also emphasizes the “natural and constant exercise of patience and tolerance” as having a “decisive and definitive influence on significant changes in conduct.”

Our mental packing list is a practical application of these very virtues. By choosing to listen patiently and respond with affection, we are enriching our self-knowledge and consciously evolving. González Pecotche confirms that those who engage in these practices will see a clear transformation, while those who remain “oblivious to said practices are falling behind.” Thus, our efforts to change our conduct during family travel are not just about having a better vacation—they are part of a deeper process of personal and conscious evolution.

By Luciana Galleran

“Logosophy marks the beginning of a new culture. The resources of Logosophy are inexhaustible and will be able to enrich the whole world. It is a new mental energy that illuminates man from within, permitting him to become acquainted with himself to the most hidden folds of his psychology.

Excerpt from the book Logosophy: Science and Method by González Pecotche, back cover.

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